Fall Gardening Zone 6-7
11 products
50% OFF ALL SEED PACKETS, FREE SHIPPING ON JUST SEED ORDERS OVER $20
50% OFF ALL SEED PACKETS, FREE SHIPPING ON JUST SEED ORDERS OVER $20
no code needed and sale may not be combined with discounts or points
no code needed and sale may not be combined with discounts or points
Seed orders are shipping 7-10 Business Days After Being Placed
Seed orders are shipping 7-10 Business Days After Being Placed
11 products
First Frost: Mid to late October
Start your fall crops in early to late August, and keep sowing every couple of weeks for a steady harvest. These zones have time for roots, greens, and some slow-growers like Swiss chard.
Start sowing:
Swiss chard, beets (Formanova), salad burnet, kale: Late July through mid-August
Lettuce, spinach, arugula, cilantro: Early to late August
Carrots, bok choy: By mid-August
Quick tip: Add a 1–2" layer of compost before sowing to refresh summer beds.
Fall crops can be sown through mid to late September
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I grew only a few seeds, but they came up fine, and I was able to get some delicious, sweet melon! I sprayed it once with a copper fungicide, and I should have done it a second time, but I still go melons. (I have a struggle with fungal problems here). Easy to grow, easy to eat!
This stuff feed my garden all summer. Highly recommend
This was one of my first tomatoes from MIgardener seed and I loved it so much. Very tasty green tomato, and even though it was only in a smallish container, it was one of my best producers! Nice clusters (not quite so big and dense as the photo, for me at least...) and great flavor for eating fresh in the garden. I'm not the best with tomatoes, I don't treat them as well as I should, and I grow in Seattle (8b?) which is finicky weather every year, so I was surprised these did so well! Will definitely grow again. Unfortunately I don't have any pictures saved on the vine, but the little green one in the attached photo is one of them!
Love sales. Time to stock up
Pollinators love this flower. Especially honey bees.
They grew in spring then reseeded themselves for fall.